One of the first connectivity wins for hearing aids was the invention of the telecoil. Placed inside the hearing aid, it would pick up a magnetic field from a landline telephone or room loop system. Wearers still had to manually activate it to use the technology, but the benefit of better phone conversations was well worth it. It’s tried-and-true technology that’s still present in many of our hearing aids today.
The introduction of our easy-t feature took the convenience of phone calls up a notch by automatically switching to a dedicated telephone setting whenever a receiver containing a magnetic field was held up to the hearing aid. This made having clearer phone conversations a more seamless experience for wearers.
These days, people wearing Unitron hearing aids also enjoy the Binaural Phone feature, which automatically streams audio from the phone ear to the non-phone ear on a landline or mobile phone. It’s a win for wearers everywhere.
“We know that people with hearing loss do better when they have information from two ears, and that carries through to their phone conversations,” says Jesse Sinclair, Senior Hearing Performance Audiologist. “We developed the Binaural Phone feature with the goal of helping wearers have clear, high-quality conversations over the phone.”
More recently, our technology innovations are making hands-free calling possible. But to talk about that, we first need to explore how the ability for hearing aids to talk to one another totally changed the feature-development game.